| Brett Scott on Mon, 10 Aug 2015 16:56:19 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| <nettime> The Gentrification of Hacking: How yuppies hacked the hacker ethos |
Dear Nettimers,
My new essay in Aeon Magazine on 'The Gentrification of Hacking: How
yuppies hacked the hacker ethos' can be found here
[1]http://aeon.co/magazine/technology/how-yuppies-hacked-the-original-hacker-ethos/.
You can find a long excerpt below. Comments welcome
Cheers,
Brett Scott
@suitpossum
EXCERPT (starts about half way through the article):
The word `hacker' came into its own in the age of information
technology (IT) and the personal computer. The subtitle of Levy's
seminal book - Heroes of the Computer Revolution - immediately situated
hackers as the crusaders of computer geek culture. While some hacker
principles he described were broad - such as `mistrust authority' and
`promote decentralisation' - others were distinctly IT-centric. `You
can create art and beauty on a computer,' read one. `All information
should be free,' declared another.
Ever since, most popular representations of the hacker way have
followed Levy's lead. Neal Stephenson's cyberpunk novel Snow Crash
(1992) featured the code-wielding Hiro as the `last of the freelance
hackers'. The film Hackers (1995) boasted a youthful crew of
jargon-rapping, keyboard-hammering computer ninjas. The media
stereotype that began to be constructed was of a precocious computer
genius using his technological mastery to control events or battle
others. It remains popular to this day. In the James Bond film Skyfall
(2012), the gadget-master Q is reinvented by the actor Ben Whishaw as a
young hacker with a laptop, controlling lines of code with almost
superhuman efficiency, as if his brain was wired directly into the
computer.
In a sense, then, computers were the making of the hacker, at least as
a popular cultural image. But they were also its undoing. If the
popular imagination hadn't chained the hacker figure so forcefully to
IT, it's hard to believe it ever would have been demonised in the way
it has been, or that it could have been so effectively defanged.
Computers, and especially the internet, are a primary means of
subsistence for many. This understandably increases public anxiety at
the bogeyman figure of the criminal `hacker', the dastardly villain who
breaches computer security to steal and cause havoc. Never mind that in
`true' hacker culture - as found in hackerspaces, maker-labs and
open-source communities around the world - the mechanical act of
breaking into a computer is just one manifestation of the drive to
explore beyond established boundaries. In the hands of a sensationalist
media, the ethos of hacking is conflated with the act of cracking
computer security. Anyone who does that, regardless of the underlying
ethos, is a `hacker'. Thus a single manifestation of a single element
of the original spirit gets passed off as the whole.
Through the lens of moral panic, a narrative emerges of hackers as a
class of computer attack-dogs. Their primary characteristics become
aggression and amorality. How to guard against them? How, indeed, to
round out the traditional good-versus-evil narrative? Well, naturally,
with a class of poacher-turned-gamekeepers. And so we find the
construction of `white-hat' hackers, protective and upstanding computer
wizards for the public good.
Here is where the second form of corruption begins to emerge. The
construct of the `good hacker' has paid off in unexpected ways, because
in our computerised world we have also seen the emergence of a huge,
aggressively competitive technology industry with a serious innovation
obsession. This is the realm of startups, venture capitalists, and
shiny corporate research and development departments. And, it is here,
in subcultures such as Silicon Valley, that we find a rebel spirit
succumbing to perhaps the only force that could destroy it:
gentrification.
Gentrification is the process by which nebulous threats are pacified
and alchemised into money. A raw form - a rough neighbourhood,
indigenous ritual or edgy behaviour such as parkour (or free running) -
gets stripped of its otherness and repackaged to suit mainstream
sensibilities. The process is repetitive. Desirable, unthreatening
elements of the source culture are isolated, formalised and emphasised,
while the unsettling elements are scrubbed away.
Key to any gentrification process are successive waves of pioneers who
gradually reduce the perceived risk of the form in question. In
property gentrification, this starts with the artists and disenchanted
dropouts from mainstream society who are drawn to marginalised areas.
Despite their countercultural impulses, they always carry with them
traces of the dominant culture, whether it be their skin colour or
their desire for good coffee. This, in turn, creates the seeds for
certain markets to take root. A WiFi coffeeshop appears next to the
Somalian community centre. And that, in turn, sends signals back into
the mainstream that the area is slightly less alien than it used to be.
If you repeat this cycle enough times, the perceived dangers that keep
the property developers and yuppies away gradually erode. Suddenly, the
tipping point arrives. Through a myriad of individual actions under no
one person's control, the exotic other suddenly appears within a safe
frame: interesting, exciting and cool, but not threatening. It becomes
open to a carefree voyeurism, like a tiger being transformed into a zoo
animal, and then a picture, and then a tiger-print dress to wear at
cocktail parties. Something feels `gentrified' when this shallow
aesthetic of tiger takes over from the authentic lived experience of
tiger.
This is not just about property. In cosmetics shops on Oxford Street in
London you can find beauty products blazoned with pagan earth-mother
imagery. Why are symbols of earth-worship found within the citadels of
consumerism, printed on products designed to neutralise and control
bodily processes? They've been gentrified. Pockets of actual paganism
do still exist, but in the mainstream such imagery has been thoroughly
cleansed of any subversive context.
At the frontiers of gentrification are entire ways of being -
lifestyles, subcultures and outlooks that carry rebellious impulses.
Rap culture is a case in point: from its ghetto roots, it has crossed
over to become a safe `thing that white people like'. Gentrification is
an enabler of doublethink, a means by which people in positions of
relative power can, without contradiction, embrace practices that were
formed in resistance to the very things they themselves represent.
We are currently witnessing the gentrification of hacker culture. The
countercultural trickster has been pressed into the service of the
preppy tech entrepreneur class. It began innocently, no doubt. The
association of the hacker ethic with startups might have started with
an authentic counter-cultural impulse on the part of outsider nerds
tinkering away on websites. But, like all gentrification, the influx
into the scene of successive waves of ever less disaffected individuals
results in a growing emphasis on the unthreatening elements of hacking
over the subversive ones.
Silicon Valley has come to host, on the one hand, a large number of
highly educated tech-savvy people who loosely perceive themselves as
rebels set against existing modes of doing business. On the other hand,
it contains a very large pool of venture capital. The former group
jostle for the investor money by explicitly attempting to build network
monopolies - such as those created by Facebook and Google - for the
purpose of extracting windfall profit for the founders and for the
investors that back them, and perhaps, for the large corporates who
will buy them out.
In this economic context, curiosity, innovation and iterative
experimentation are ultimate virtues, and this element of the hacker
ethic has proved to be an appealing frame for people to portray their
actions within. Traits such as the drive for individual empowerment and
the appreciation of clever solutions already resemble the traits of the
entrepreneur. In this setting, the hacker attitude of playful
troublemaking can be cast in Schumpeterian terms: success-driven
innovators seeking to `disrupt' old incumbents within a market in an
elite `rebellion'.
Thus the emergent tech industry's definition of `hacking' as
quirky-but-edgy innovation by optimistic entrepreneurs with a love of
getting things done. Nothing sinister about it: it's just on-the-fly
problem-solving for profit. This gentrified pitch is not just a cool
personal narrative. It's also a useful business construct, helping the
tech industry to distinguish itself from the aggressive squares of Wall
Street, competing for the same pool of new graduates.
Indeed, the revised definition of the tech startup entrepreneur as a
hacker forms part of an emergent system of Silicon Valley doublethink:
individual startups portray themselves as `underdogs' while
simultaneously being aware of the enormous power and wealth the tech
industry they're a part of wields at a collective level. And so we see
a gradual stripping away of the critical connotations of hacking. Who
said a hacker can't be in a position of power? Google cloaks itself in
a quirky `hacker' identity, with grown adults playing ping pong on
green AstroTurf in the cafeteria, presiding over the company's
overarching agenda of network control.
This doublethink bleeds through into mainstream corporate culture, with
the growing institution of the corporate `hackathon'. We find financial
giants such as Barclays hosting startup accelerators and financial
technology hackathons at forums such as the FinTech Innovation Lab in
Canary Wharf in London, ostensibly to discover the `future of
finance'... or at least the future of payment apps that they can buy
out. In this context, the hacker ethic is hollowed out and subsumed
into the ideology of solutionism, to use a term coined by the
Belarusian-born tech critic Evgeny Morozov. It describes the
tech-industry vision of the world as a series of problems waiting for
(profitable) solutions.
This process of gentrification becomes a war over language. If enough
newcomers with media clout use the hollowed-out version of the term,
its edge grows dull. You end up with a mere affectation, failing to
challenge otherwise conventional aspirations. And before you know it,
an earnest Stanford grad is handing me a business card that says,
without irony: `Founder. Investor. Hacker.'
--
Brett Scott / [2]@suitpossum / 079 8243 7769 / [3]LinkedIn / [4]Blog
__________________________________________________________________
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
# archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org